Product Description
TomTom NAVIGATOR 5 is your personal assistant on the road. Spoken instructions and 3D maps lead you from door-to-door. You can plan routes to multiple destinations&add stopping points. Navigate directly from your PDA address book integrating TomTom software into the PDA menu.
Amazon.com Product Description
With the TomTom Navigator 5 System with Maps of the US and Canada for Compatible PDAs you never need to be lost again, wherever you are, whatever you are doing. TomTom's Navigator 5 software is designed for people who already own a PDA without a built-in NMEA 0183 GPS receiver. This package provides a wired GPS receiver and all the Navigator 5 software with maps of the complete US and Canada, which once installed on your PDA will let you know not only where you are going, but exactly how best to get there.
The TomTom Navigator 5 software is not only effortless to install, but easy to use with a touch-screen user menu that gives you an intuitive navigation experience, and an inherent portability that lets you take it with you anywhere, whether in your car, on your bike, or on foot. This software gives you the convenience of millions of pre-installed POIs (points of interest) from restaurants to gas stations, allowing you to search by proximity to your current location, along your route, near a specific city and more, even including the ability to set automatic alerts as you approach, as well as letting you plan your route to fit your requirements.
Navigator 5 not only guides you from door to door, but can navigate directly to contacts from your PDA address book, complete with stopovers and itinerary planning for routing to multiple destinations while adding stopping points. The user-friendly interface features a tip system for when you are just getting started, an optional compass display, and the ability to show a route demonstration so you can better know what things are going to look like in advance.
TomTom's Navigator 5 system provides you with crystal clear 3D graphics, and allows you to improve the readability by customizing the dynamic status bar. Suitable for almost anybody, this navigation system will also guide you from door-to-door with easy spoken directions that come in 30 different languages that include with the European languages such options as Chinese, Thai, Japanese and more, as well as providing 18 different languages for its user interface.
Full of smart extras and additional options, the TomTom Navigator 5 system supports a wide range of TomTom Plus services and downloads. TomTom Plus lets you receive real-time, up-to-the-minute traffic information, with jam alerts and road condition warnings, as well as use instant messaging and more to keep in touch with a selected group of people, including tracking their location. TomTom Plus is an optional, cost-based service that can be accessed through Navigator 5 at any time.
The Navigator 5 system encourages you to get from A to B as quickly and easily as possible, and comes with the smallest and lightest wired GPS receiver possible, so it easily fits in your pocket or bag. The TomTom Navigator 5 software and GPS receiver is compatible with most popular brands and models of PDAs, including; PalmOne, Sony, Acer, Airis, Dell, Fujitsu Siemens, HP, Imate, O2, Qtek, and T-Mobile.
What's in the Box
Navigation 5 software with application and maps of the US and Canada, wired GPS receiver, full user's manual, installation guide, quick-start guide, and product code card.
Customer Reviews:
Inaccurate Maps, lack of POI's, Wrong POI locations, crashes... .......2007-03-20
TomTom Software Review!
Pros: Being able to have it integrated on the Smart Phone
Cons: Inaccurate Maps (we are talking miles not feet!), Difficult of use, cumbersome menus, lack of POI's, Wrong POI locations, crashes often and the list goes on....
Review:
This software should be labeled a beta software until the company works out all its problems, it should be never compared to Garmin or Magellan, I owned both and it does not even come close.
I will start with the pros since it will take the least time to mention.
Pros: Convenience of having a Navigation loaded on your phone, the GPS receiver can be left in the vehicle except when you are hiking for example.
Cons:
Maps:
The inaccuracy of the Maps are incredible and can lead you to a wrong place or miss a free way exit.
Maps are out dated; it did not show streets that have been updated on all map search engines 18 month prior.
You can not click and pan the maps to see the route ahead while on route.
Crashes often, about once every 2~3 days.
You would expect to be able to easily access your address book or contacts to navigate to a saved address; right? Not with TomTom, you have to exit the application and open another application called tomtom contacts there you can select a name and from the pull down click on navigate to address, it would then open the main navi software and show you the route, Oh but if for some reason you did not have your satellite locked yet, then you will have to exit out and do the same thing all over again! I think you agree that this is a bit cumbersome.
Sync
It gives data base errors of "WARNING: Possible database overwrite problem....", after contacting the customer service they said that it is a known problem! And nothing can be done???!!! So now every time I sync I have to ignore the warning message so other problems might go unnoticed thanks to the smart developers at TomTom.
POI (Points of Interest):
Again incomplete, inaccurate and difficult to use. For example if you are looking for a certain store and the search returns 6 and let us say the first 3 are approximately 3mi from where you are, you will not be able to select each one to further know more info - all you can do is pick one to get the directions to.
SD card:
Every time you insert the SD card into your PDA, the TomTom application will have start, and No, this is not an option you can turn off.
Customer Service:
Not very helpful, not knowledgeable about their products or offers and take long time to answer questions or concerns.
I am disappointed at the product which could have been an incredible for the convenience, I hope that the people involved in making decisions for the company go out and buy some different Navigation units and see how they can improve their product.
Thanks for your time reading my review!
Doesn't Work at Critical Moments.......2006-07-31
Update: I wrote the review below based on my experiences with TomTom Navigator for Palm, which was version 4. I've seen v5 in operation but have not used it myself. From what I saw, TomTom has resolved some of the issues that I mentioned, but there was no way to test for signal problems.
*****
I've owned TomTom Navigator for my PDA for a while now, and I just can't recommend it. There are many things to like, but the problems with the software outweigh the good. A couple of good features:
+ Nice 3D map view.
+ Interface desiged for fingers, not a stylus.
But the main problem:
- Sometimes it just refuses to see the GPS signal, which means it's no good at all. I have a wired GPS antenna, so it's not a bluetooth problem. It could be working fine, then I'll switch to the address book to look up a phone number and then switch back to Navigator, and it says it can't find the GPS signal. It had no trouble finding it 30 seconds before, and nothing has changed, but it will not find it no matter how long I wait. I've tried to work with TomTom on this and they replaced my cradle and gave me some setup steps to try, but the problem is still there. If a GPS device can't find the signal, all those pretty maps are worthless. I'd say that it works at least 90% of the time, but that 10% is a killer, especially when you're on a trip to an unfamiliar city and you need to find your way back to the airport in time for your flight.
A few design problems:
- The "Major Roads of the USA" map is just roads; it has no POI information. So if you're on a long trip, you have to switch maps to find a hotel or restaurant.
- Map groupings are limited, so you have to load individual states or predefined groups. You can't plan a long trip and load just the states for that trip in one installation.
- Maps don't switch automatically. For example, if you're in Massachusetts and you drive to New York and you have both maps loaded, it won't switch to the NY map automatically.
- POIs don't have any useful information, such as addresses and phone numbers. You can't see an address for a POI even though the Navigator obviously knows it. And there are no phone numbers that might let you call a restaurant or hotel and make a reservation.
- You can't pick a POI for another location. If you're in city A and you are driving to city B and you want to have dinner there, you can't search for restaurants in city B. All POI searches are based on your current location.
- POI list doesn't tell you enough. For example, supposed you want to find a McDonalds. (I don't know why you would, but it works for the illustration.) So you go to the Restaurant POI list and you type in "mcd" and you see a list of McDonalds restaurants, and their distance from your current location. But that's all. Some other GPS systems at least tell you which direction, which is useful to prevent you from selecting one that you passed or that is completely out of your way. The list could also tell you what city, again to help you select one that is on your route.
If you have a Bluetooth PDA, it's a great alternative to pricey all-in-1 unit.......2005-10-27
Why pay for another small computer with a touchscreen when you already have one? The TomTom Navigator 5 with its CDs of maps and software is less than half the price of an all-in-one unit. One advantage over the all-in-ones is that you can put the Navigator way out on your car's dash to receive a good signal while keeping the PDA's screen closer to you (or even with someone in the back seat). In my looking around, it appeared that TomTom is one of the better GPS software companies. Their software was definitely easy for me to figure out. I paired the Navigator GPS receiver (about the size of a double-thick iPod nano) with my Treo on a recent trip to New York. It worked great.
MY EXPERIENCE SETTING IT UP: To set it up you need to load the software onto your PDA, visit the TomTom site, and enter in some passwords. Then it's time to load the map(s) you need. Warning: one state can take 50 MB or more (make sure you have room on your PDA's expansion card or buy a bigger one). Loading maps for NY, CT and MA totaled about 75 MB. Transferring that much info to your PDA takes about 10 minutes. Then it's time to register the maps which requires going back to the TomTom website.
Getting into the software, I went to the "Points of Interest" option, chose "Airports", selected Laguardia Airport, and saved it as a favorite. I then went to the "Hotels", selected the one I was staying at and saved it as "home". It got me right to the hotel with only one confusing direction near the end of the trip. While at the hotel, I found that I needed to go to a grocery store. I found one in the "Stores" portion of "Points of Interest" and it navigated me to it perfectly.
THINGS I LEARNED:
1) You need to be out in the open for the GPS to pick up satellite signals (don't try to use it inside or in a parking garage).
2) Try it out around town before you try it on a trip so you know it works and to get a better idea of how far say "800 yards" is. The voice will often tell you something like, "turn right in 800 yards" and I didn't have a good feel for how far that was when I first began using it.
3) It will tell you when to turn, when to stay right, and when to veer left, etc. But it doesn't speak street names (although the display does SHOW the street name of the next street you need to take).
4) The only power adapter included is for a cigarette lighter.
5) An in-car PDA holder with windshield suction cup or vent attachment is a necessity.
6) If you have a combination PDA/Phone, you may want to turn the phone off while using the GPS. I got a call in the middle of driving. If a turn had been coming up, I would have missed it.
7) If you get lost, there's nothing like a paper map that allows you to see the big picture (rather than a 3" x 3" screen).
8) Listening to your directions spoken with optional British and Australian accents is a "trip".
All in all, I am very pleased with my purchase and will take the Navigator 5 with me on all my future trips.
NOT COMPATIBLE.......2005-09-24
I ordered this unit and the GPS unit came with a RJ-14 connector for a laptop not for Palm.
FLEXIBLE AND THOROUGH.......2005-08-26
This is my first GPS product; it is installed on my Acer N35. I don't have a lot to compare to, but I can nonetheless say that this product has met or exceeded most of my expectations. I am told that as TomTom is a more popular brand, you will have a bit more support, a bit more coverage, and a bit more compatiblity. I should also add that I purchased Tomtom Navigator 5 EUROPE (as I live in France).
On another note, if you purchase a PDA/GPS in France, you have to be careful about the maps. Here, the PDA only comes with France/Monacco, so you need to purchase from Tomtom or another provider each map separately. The better way to do Europe is to purchase the PDA without maps/software and buy Tomtom Navigator 5. Buying all countries at once is much cheaper than one at a time.
Pros:
Excellent 3D rendering of where you are and where you are going, that puts you virtually where you are. If you are facing a lake, it will put the lake on the top of your screen. You to move about 5 feet or so and maybe 5-10 seconds for the system to orient.
2D map is fine.
There is also a nice night color map with blues, grays, and blacks.
Options to select by limited speed, bike, foot, etc.
Some amazing coverage such as each footpath on the city park.
Europe maps are very extensive, from the UK to Poland (though only about 17% of the latter).
I think that if it loses the signal, it assumes you are on track and keeps calculating and moving based on last direction and speed (great, for example, if you are going under a tunnel).
Voice commands are fine, nothing special but quick and to the point. Commands are in many languages that you can select from (even American and UK English).
Cons:
Does not have every address (does not have my work address which is a big building on a major street)
Install is frustrating. I had to reboot my computer and PPC several times, and worst of all I kept getting a "insufficient space in temporary folder" error (or something like that). I checked the Tomtom site, no help. I had to search around the net and found out that I needed to delete a setup folder on my temporary PC drive via the "RUN" command in the Start menu.
The Tomtom commands are a bit difficult, because they sound a lot alike.
No altitude readings (as far as I can see).
Don't let vendors fool you about the size of the memory cards you need. France, for example, requires a 512 MB card (it is about 350 MB).
I havent figured out if I can copy the maps to my SD card via my SD reader. Thus, via my PPC, it takes over an hour to copy maps to the card.
Selecting which GPS device you have is not clearcut. It took some guessing and experimenting on my part to get the built-in device recognized.
Still, as I said, over half of my problems were install related. Doubtlessly, once I have figured out all of the commands and after I am over my install gripes, I will be very pleased. This works great with the Acer N35.
Product Description
Your no-hassles wireless car navigation system. Go wireless with TomTom Navigator Bluetooth for your palmOne handheld device. Find your way without asking for directions or fumbling maps.
Amazon.com Product Description
With the TomTom Navigator 5 System with Maps of the US and Canada for Compatible PDAs with Bluetooth you never need to be lost again, wherever you are, whatever you are doing. TomTom's Navigator 5 software is designed for people who already own a PDA with Bluetooth functionality, but without a built-in NMEA 0183 GPS receiver. This package provides a Bluetooth GPS receiver and all the Navigator 5 software with maps of the complete US and Canada, which once installed on your PDA will let you know not only where you are going, but exactly how best to get there.
The TomTom Navigator 5 software is not only effortless to install, but easy to use with a touch-screen user menu that gives you an intuitive navigation experience, and an inherent portability that lets you take it with you anywhere, whether in your car, on your bike, or on foot. This software gives you the convenience of millions of pre-installed POIs (points of interest) from restaurants to gas stations, allowing you to search by proximity to your current location, along your route, near a specific city and more, even including the ability to set automatic alerts as you approach, as well as letting you plan your route to fit your requirements.
Navigator 5 not only guides you from door to door, but can navigate directly to contacts from your PDA address book, complete with stopovers and itinerary planning for routing to multiple destinations while adding stopping points. The user-friendly interface features a tip system for when you are just getting started, an optional compass display, and the ability to show a route demonstration so you can better know what things are going to look like in advance.
TomTom's Navigator 5 system provides you with crystal clear 3D graphics, and allows you to improve the readability by customizing the dynamic status bar. Suitable for almost anybody, this navigation system will also guide you from door-to-door with easy spoken directions that come in 30 different languages that include with the European languages such options as Chinese, Thai, Japanese and more, as well as providing 18 different languages for its user interface.
Full of smart extras and additional options, the TomTom Navigator 5 system supports a wide range of TomTom Plus services and downloads. TomTom Plus lets you receive real-time, up-to-the-minute traffic information, with jam alerts and road condition warnings, as well as use instant messaging and more to keep in touch with a selected group of people, including tracking their location. TomTom Plus is an optional, cost-based service that can be accessed through Navigator 5 at any time.
The Navigator 5 system encourages you to get from A to B as quickly and easily as possible, and comes with the smallest and lightest wireless GPS receiver possible, so it easily fits in your pocket or bag. The TomTom Navigator 5 software and GPS receiver is compatible with most popular brands and models of PDAs, including; PalmOne, Sony, Acer, Airis, Dell, Fujitsu Siemens, HP, Imate, O2, Qtek, and T-Mobile.
What's in the Box
Navigation 5 software with application and maps of the US and Canada, Bluetooth GPS receiver, full user's manual, installation guide, quick-start guide, and product code card.
Customer Reviews:
It's probably a great product...if I could only activate it!.......2006-02-12
I received my shrink-wrapped, brand-spanking new TomTom Bluetooth package from Amazon and was really looking forward to using it. Before being able to use the software on your Pocket PC, however, you have to activate it using the product code in the package. This is done on-line. Unfortunately, when I entered my product code, thier web site informed me that my supposedly brand new software package had already been activated and assigned to two different Pocket PCs!
So I'm left with a totally useless $270 stack of CDs. I e-mailed thier tech support, which told me they would respond in a few days. It was then, after Googling for info, I began to realize that thier tech support is apparently second to none in terms of poor quality and sluggish responsiveness. I'm already beginning to regret this purchase 12 hours after receiving it.
I am willing to bet they had a problem with thier packaging procedures and put the same product code in multiple boxes. Apparently two other people got my product code, as evidenced by the other activation codes.
I would give them only 1 star instead of 2, but I have heard such good things about thier software...once it's installed. I am hoping they respond within a decent time frame, otherwise it's off the RMA page.
......................................
UPDATE: 3 days later after getting no response, I called TomTom at the number listed on thier site. Got an operator who said they would respond within 24 hours. 2 hours later I received an e-mail asking me to PROVE I really bought the product, so I had to fax my receipt, a copy of the product card, and a copy of the 1st CD to them. An hour later I received a new product code via e-mail that worked the first time. Bottom, line - 5 hours after I called them I was back in business.
If you can get past the activation and tech support hurdles, it's a great product.
Not perfect, but pretty close.......2005-11-15
The receiver has very good sensitivity and locks on faster than any I have used before. The performance of the receiver sitting in my pocket on the lower deck of a steel bridge is better than my old Garmin GPS V with an external antenna. I had my doubts about using a receiver without an external antenna connection, but now that I've tried this one I don't think it's an issue and more and I'll be happy not to have to run the wire out the door.
The maps cover very large areas, so although you do need to select the right map that's not something you have to do often. You can see the 'granularity' in the maps, the corners aren't smooth but instead are made of obvious segments, so it could be just a tiny bit pretier. The flip side is that I've got the whole of the west, with the exception of Alaska, on a 512Mb SD card, I expect you can get the whole country including Canada and Hawaii on a 1Gb card.
The software is fairly easy to use, as an engineer I have a tendancy to expect that I should only have to read the manual if someone hasn't done their job properly, it wasn't necessary to read the manual to get home and to a few experimental destinations. Rerouting is very fast, but that's partly a function of the Dell x51v it's running on. The voice directions are particularly well timed, a human navigator would be unlikely to drop them in as well.
During routing I would often like to see the road further ahead, but then thus far I haven't been on any thousand mile trips, but it seems to show only a couple of miles and I like the Garmin way of showing the map to the next waypoint. There are pros and cons, this is more the way of the Magelan devices.
I took quite a few deliberate wrong turns and in each case the reroute was completed before I reached the next block. The rerouting did not exhibit an unreasonable attachment to the original route, unlike some other software I've used it didn't keep telling me to do a U-turn.
There were two minor irritations with the installation, the first is that you need to install the maps one at a time and I kept having to swap disks, they should have allowed me to choose a set of maps and then just swap disks once.
The on-line registration just gave me a blank screen, I don't know if this was caused by a firewall or whether they rely on some aspect of Java or ActiveX which my spyware and malware protection software doesn't allow. Once the software was installed on the PDA it did a perfectly good job of enabling the maps with minimal fuss.
I'm happy with this choice of hardware and software, if that changes I'll update the review.
[update after a 875 mile, 15 hour trip, including stops]
First, the routing is pretty good. The trip was from Alameda, CA to Port Angeles, WA. The route was found fast and looked good, so off we went. But there was a shock, departure at 0600, predicted arrival 0030 or thereabouts. What? Erm, 18 hours of freeway... worst case bad day 50mph... 900 miles. No way! In the end it was 14 hours of driving. The last stretch was supposed to take me three hours and took maybe one and a quarter. The route was basically I880, I980, I580, I80, I505, I5, WA SR16, WA SR3, US101. I'm pretty sure that last bit after I5 was wrong, it should have just taken US101 from Olympia and would have shortened the trip as well as avoiding a lot of traffic.
Is that fair? Yes. US101 is a major road, the SR16 and SR3 sections are not. I think all this is based in bad road speed settings and I don't know how to change them, if I can.
Three years ago Garmin programmed the GPS V and, other than stops and accidents, I've never seen it off by more than a few percent on longish trips. A few minutes per hour. So maybe on the trip today it would have been out by 30 minutes. Not four hours!
The scaling of the display and the automatic zoom needs some work. On my 624MHz Dell PDA it all looks very pretty, but at 70mph the section of road the display shows is far too small, there's no significant forewarning and there's nothing to maintain your situational awareness. One of the things I like about having a GPS is that you can always see where you are in the grand scheme of things, but by continuously zooming back to the small area display the Navigator 5 software denies you this view. If I select a larger scale then the software should accept that I know what I'm doing and give it to me.
The 3D view is more of a gimic than a tool most of the time, the regular map view shows maybe three times as much road. I think the 3D view is most use to people who can't look at a map and work out what the world must look like.
What would be nice would be an overhead map you could lock to a 5,10,15,25,50 miles scale with a zoom to the 3D view at junctions. There should, perhaps be an option to display just a centered map, which I think is all MS Pocket Streets and Trips will allow (no routing etc in that), so that you can see how you are doing on your route. The bad choice of fixed scale together with the bad predictions has given me an unnecessarily stressful day filled with dead reckoning calculations and attempts to zoom the map whiles driving (bad idea but that '-' key was right there). I accidentally found that taping the bottom right of the screen shows the whole route, but for a thousand mile drive that was a bit too small, and no zoom controls. There are map options which will allow you to view your trip at an appropriate scale, but that involves draging and zooming the map yourself. Hopefully Tomtom will address this?
I could be tempted to try another software package.
The GPS receiver was flawless again, solid lock all day, the signal strength always showed maximum. It's a very good receiver and I have had no Bluetooth issues what so ever.
Great Product - Great Customer Service.......2005-05-10
Not only does the GPS mapping work well, it is designed for ease of use and, in some instances, better than GPS units I've seen installed in other cars for many times the price!
Getting up and running was somewhat frustrating as the product code needed to activate the item was not included in the box. In fact the documentation provided is somewhat wanting but sufficient. However I emailed TomTom's customer support from their website and they got me going in no time.
Since then, I've had four other requests/issues that they solved very quickly through their online support. Now that that is all behind me, I couldn't be happier with the product or the way it works. The map appears to be about 1-2 years old (didn't have a local golf course that opened recently nor a recently rerouted road), but they promise to have updated maps soon.
Be warned--no mounting device comes with the packaging. You have to buy this separately.
Great with Treo 650.......2005-03-05
I have tried several in car navigation systems and this seems just good. Great for frequent travler as all I need to bring is the small bluetooth GPS unit.
Product Description
Already have a GPS receiver? Want a navigation software that works on a Pocket PC device? It is time to let Navigator 2004 turn your PDA into an in-car navigation system. Clear spoken instructions in your language. Crystal-clear 3D or 2D views with day/night variations. 1000s of points of interests: Hotels, Restaurants, etc. Route Recalculation: reroute around road work or traffic. Detailed Maps of the USA and Canada provided on CD. Includes 8 CDs (navigation application, maps of the USA and Canada and documentation), Registration, User manual and software license. An SD memory card is required to run this solution (not included).
Amazon.com Product Description
With the TomTom Navigator 5 System with Maps of the US and Canada for Compatible PDAs with a Built-in GPS Receiver you never need to be lost again, wherever you are, whatever you are doing. TomTom's Navigator 5 software is designed for people who already own a PDA with a built-in NMEA 0183 GPS receiver. This package provides all the Navigator 5 software with maps of the complete US and Canada, which once installed on your PDA will let you know not only where you are going, but exactly how best to get there.
The TomTom Navigator 5 software is not only effortless to install, but easy to use with a touch-screen user menu that gives you an intuitive navigation experience, and an inherent portability that lets you take it with you anywhere, whether in your car, on your bike, or on foot. This software gives you the convenience of millions of pre-installed POIs (points of interest) from restaurants to gas stations, allowing you to search by proximity to your current location, along your route, near a specific city and more, even including the ability to set automatic alerts as you approach, as well as letting you plan your route to fit your requirements.
Navigator 5 not only guides you from door to door, but can navigate directly to contacts from your PDA address book, complete with stopovers and itinerary planning for routing to multiple destinations while adding stopping points. The user-friendly interface features a tip system for when you are just getting started, an optional compass display, and the ability to show a route demonstration so you can better know what things are going to look like in advance.
TomTom's Navigator 5 system provides you with crystal clear 3D graphics, and allows you to improve the readability by customizing the dynamic status bar. Suitable for almost anybody, this navigation system will also guide you from door-to-door with easy spoken directions that come in 30 different languages that include with the European languages such options as Chinese, Thai, Japanese and more, as well as providing 18 different languages for its user interface.
Full of smart extras and additional options, the TomTom Navigator 5 system supports a wide range of TomTom Plus services and downloads. TomTom Plus lets you receive real-time, up-to-the-minute traffic information, with jam alerts and road condition warnings, as well as use instant messaging and more to keep in touch with a selected group of people, including tracking their location. TomTom Plus is an optional, cost-based service that can be accessed through Navigator 5 at any time.
The Navigator 5 system encourages you to get from A to B as quickly and easily as possible, and is compatible with most popular brands and models of PDAs, including; PalmOne, Sony, Acer, Airis, Dell, Fujitsu Siemens, HP, Imate, O2, Qtek, and T-Mobile.
What's in the Box
Navigation 5 software with application and maps of the US and Canada, full user's manual, installation guide, quick-start guide, and product code card.
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